Output list
Journal article
Published 01/09/2019
Socio-Historical Examination of Religion and Ministry, 1, 2, 252 - 273
Once esteemed as the highest form of knowledge, the legitimacy of metaphysics as a rational discipline has been severely challenged since the rise of modern science, particularly since it seemed that while the latter reached overall consensus, the disputes in the former seemed interminable. The question naturally arises whether metaphysics could ever achieve the status of a science. The following article presents the view that metaphysics is not nor could ever become a science in the sense of the modern “hard” sciences today because a) it seeks a different sort of knowledge, which b) cannot be acquired by the methods of modern science; and c) metaphysics serves a different cognitive purpose than the sort of knowledge that science can provide. It is, nevertheless, a rational subject, one in fact that supplies the necessary rational foundation for the positive sciences.
Review
The Egalitarian Sprit of Christianity: The Sacred Roots of American and British Government
Published 01/03/2010
The Review of Metaphysics, 63, 3, 726 - 728
Book
Plantinga and the rationality of theism
Published 1989
Book
Man and mind: a Christian theory of personality
Published 1987
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Book
The Christian vision: man and morality
Published 1986
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Conference proceeding
Published 1986
Includes bibliographical references and index.